Course Handbook/Syllabus
Table of Contents
Instructor Information .............................................................................................................................3
Letter to the Student................................................................................................................................................3
Course Information...................................................................................................................................4
Course Description..................................................................................................................................................4
Course Competencies/Objectives/Outcomes ..........................................................................................................4
Time Commitment..................................................................................................................................................4
Course Materials.......................................................................................................................................5
Required Materials..................................................................................................................................................5
Required Technologies............................................................................................................................................5
Communication Policies............................................................................................................................5
Methods of Communication ...................................................................................................................................5
Communicating with the Instructor.........................................................................................................................6
Announcements.......................................................................................................................................................6
Course Policies...........................................................................................................................................6
Statement of Accommodation.................................................................................................................................6
Attendance, Participation, and Withdrawal Policies................................................................................................6
Completion Policies................................................................................................................................................6
The Public Nature of Writing and Issues of Confidentiality....................................................................................7
Project Format.........................................................................................................................................................7
Disposition of Projects ...........................................................................................................................................7
Safe Classroom Environment Statement.................................................................................................................7
Learning Centered Environment Statement.............................................................................................................7
Online Learning Environments ..............................................................................................................................9
A Note on Plagiarism..............................................................................................................................................9
Grading Policies.......................................................................................................................................10
Assignment Distribution.......................................................................................................................................10
Calculating your Homework Grade...................................................................................................................10
Grading Scale........................................................................................................................................................10
Incomplete Grades.............................................................................................................................................10
Grading Response Time........................................................................................................................................10
Course Schedule/Calendar......................................................................................................................11
Other Important Dates...........................................................................................................................................11
Handbook/Syllabus Contract Form.......................................................................................................12
Student Responsibilities .......................................................................................................................................12
Instructor Responsibilities: ...................................................................................................................................12
Page 2 of 12
TWC301: General Principles of Multimedia Writing
Summer Session I 2011
Student Agreement................................................................................................................................................12
Page 3 of 12
TWC301: General Principles of Multimedia Writing
Summer Session I 2011
Instructor Information
Name: Shelley Rodrigo
• Phone: 623-455-6296
• E-mail address: rrodrigo@asu.edu
• Yahoo, AIM & Skype Instant Message Handle: puptoes74; Google Handle: shelley.rodrigo
• Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/shelley.rodrigo
Office Hours:
• By Appointment (I’m happy to make appointments with you to talk on the phone or over Google Talk or Skype
or…and I’m also happy to meet face-to-face.)
• I do not have an office on any of ASU’s campuses; therefore, if we meet we have to schedule both time and
location.
This is also a highly technologically mediated course. You will be responsible for working with a variety of
different technologies to accomplish the course goals. A side benefit to working with these technologies is that you
will be more comfortable with our ever changing, increasingly technological world, and learn how to more readily
adapt in and to it.
Although I firmly believe that a student is responsible for his or her own learning, I also take my role as course
instructor, learning facilitator, seriously. Part of being a good student is knowing when you need help and seeking
your instructor out for it. Do not wait until you are too far behind to catch up; if you need help, ask early, ask often!
Course Information
Course Description
Introduces writing in a variety of media, understanding the consequences of integrating media, and effective editing
techniques. Prerequisite: First-Year Composition.
Course Competencies/Objectives/Outcomes
http://techcomm.asu.edu/curriculum/twc301
Rhetorical Knowledge
• Identify, articulate, and focus on a defined purpose
• Respond to the need of the appropriate audience
• Respond appropriately to different rhetorical situations
• Use conventions of format and structure appropriate to the rhetorical situation
• Adopt appropriate voice, tone, and level of formality
• Understand how each genre helps to shape writing and how readers respond to it
• Write in multiple genres
• Understand the role of a variety of technologies/media in accessing, retrieving, managing, and
communicating information
• Use appropriate technologies to organize, present, and communicate information to address a
range of audiences, purposes, and genres
Critical Thinking, Reading, and Writing
• Use information, writing, and reading for inquiry, learning, thinking, and communicating
• Integrate previously held beliefs, assumptions, and knowledge with new information and the ideas
of others to accomplish a specific purpose within a context
Processes
• Be aware that it usually takes multiple drafts to create and complete a successful text
• Develop flexible strategies for generating, revising, editing, and proof-reading
• Understand the collaborative and social aspects of research and writing processes
• Use appropriate technologies to manage data and information collected or generated for future use
Knowledge of Conventions:
• Learn common formats for different genres
• Develop knowledge of genre conventions ranging from structure and paragraphing to tone and
mechanics
• Understand and apply legal and ethical uses of information and technology including copyright
and intellectual property
Time Commitment
Please recognize that most college courses expect two to three hours of work outside the class, for every one hour
in class. So, for a three credit hour class (during sixteen weeks) that would equate to three hours in class, and six to
nine outside of class. Since this is an online course, this equates to nine to twelve hours of work a week during a
sixteen-week semester. Since this is a condensed summer course, this equates to 27-36 hours of work a week
during a five-week session.
Page 5 of 12
TWC301: General Principles of Multimedia Writing
Summer Session I 2011
Course Materials
Required Materials
• Graham, Lisa. (2005). Basics of Design: Layout & Typography for Beginners (2nd ed.). Clifton Park:
Delmar/Cengage Learning. ISBN: 978-1-4018-7952-5
• Wolfe, Joanna. (2009). Team Writing: A Guide to Working in Groups. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s. ISBN:
9780312565824.
• A college-level dictionary and a thesaurus, for example http://www.m-w.com/
Required Technologies
Based on the type of projects you decide to submit, you may use other technologies than those listed below.
• Access to a computer with an internet connection (preferably high-speed).
• My.ASU Account to access your shared course gradebook using My.ASU Google Apps
• For introduction video: Animoto (http://animoto.com/)
• For gradebook: Google Spreadsheets in your My.ASU Google Account
• For submission of most coursework: Wordpress Blog (http://wordpress.com/)
• For bookmarking resources: Diigo (http://www.diigo.com/)
• For mind mapping: MindMesiter (http://www.mindmeister.com/)
• MS Word or other word processor that can export to PDF:
• Open Office: http://www.filehippo.com/download_openoffice/
• Google Docs: http://docs.google.com/
• Zoho Writer: http://www.zohowriter.com/jsp/home.jsp
• Browser Readers/Players/Plug-Ins, etc. to show different types of material in the course, from the library and
on the web:
• Adobe Acrobat Reader: http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html
• Flash: http://www.adobe.com/shockwave/download/alternates/#fp
• Shockwave: http://www.adobe.com/shockwave/download/alternates/#sp
• Java: http://www.java.com/en/download/manual.jsp
Communication Policies
Methods of Communication
• Email: One-on-one contact will be through your official MyASU gmail.
• Wordpress Blog—most of your homework will be submitted on your own wordpress blog. The course is also
hosted in a Wordpress blog at http://rodrigotwc301.wordpress.com/. All instruction and official announcements
will be posted there
• Major Writing Project Submission—will be submitted according to the individual assignment prompts.
• Synchronous Communication—we will have at least one student-instructor conference during the course. This
may be scheduled face-to-face or it may occur via another synchronous method (telephone, chat, instant
message, etc.).
• Gradebook—Your individual gradebook pages will be a shared Google Spreadsheet. It will be shared with you
via your My.ASU Gmail account. Once it has been set up and shared with you, you may check your gradesheet
anytime by logging into your My.ASU Gmail account, going to your My.ASU Gmail account, and clicking
“Documents” in the upper left hand corner. Your gradesheet’s name should look something like “lastname-
twc301-gradesheet.”
Page 6 of 12
TWC301: General Principles of Multimedia Writing
Summer Session I 2011
Announcements
Official course announcements, especially those that mark official changes to the syllabus and/or course schedule
and assignments deadlines, are made via the course blog. Individualize announcements and messages will be sent
via email from to you’re my.ASU Gmail account. Be sure to check your email and the course announcements page
regularly.
Course Policies
Statement of Accommodation
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) is a federal antidiscrimination statute that provides comprehensive
civil rights protection for persons with disabilities. One element of this legislation requires that all qualified
students with documented disabilities be guaranteed a learning environment that provides for reasonable
accommodation of their disabilities. I would like everyone to know that I am willing to make any reasonable
accommodation for limitations due to any disability, including learning disabilities. If you have or think you have a
disability, including a learning disability, please make an appointment with an advisor at disability resources as
soon as possible. They can assist you with appropriate accommodations for you in your classes. Please see ASU’s
Disability Resources & Services center, and then me, to discuss any special needs you might have. Information
about ASU’s Disability Resources & Services center:
• Web address: http://www.asu.edu/studentaffairs/ed/drc/
• Email address: (480) 965-1234
• Phone number: Disability-Q@asu.edu
Completion Policies
Due dates for assignments are listed in the course schedule. All assignments are due by 11:59pm on their due date.
Because you will be responding to other students' work in this class, your timely completion of assignments affects
others in the course. You may also resubmit final writing project assignments after they have been graded by me.
The final resubmission deadline is also July 1, 2011. All homework assignments (anything that is not a major
project) are due on the due date, no exceptions.
Although it is possible that the technology can fail, it is ultimately your responsibility to submit the work, in the
method requested, by the due date. (If there is an institutional, server side, technology error, I will learn about it. If
no one is able to submit there work, a new deadline will be assigned. However, if only a few people were unable to
submit the work, it is not an error on the instructor’s, institution’s, or district’s side.) If you are having difficulty
submitting an assignment, it is your responsibility to contact the instructor before the assignment is due. Otherwise,
you risk receiving no credit for the assignment.
Page 7 of 12
TWC301: General Principles of Multimedia Writing
Summer Session I 2011
Project Format
Please follow the essay/project submission guidelines as outlined in each major writing project assignment prompt.
If you do not follow the submission guidelines, I will be unable to grade your work.
Disposition of Projects
Students should keep their own projects for at least one semester. Among other things, any student who appeals a
course grade will need to submit copies of all graded course papers with the appeal.
Therefore, I ask that all student monitor their language and ways of talking about people, views, issues, and
situations. For example, sexist, racist, or homophobic language will not be tolerated. Students may encounter ideas
of which they have never hear or of which they disapprove or feel uncomfortable. I do not hope to change people’s
ideas, but I do hope to introduce students to ideas that will require them to think critically. If you feel you or others
are not being treated respectfully, please see me immediately. Consult the Student Handbook for college policies
regarding sexual harassment and other abusive behaviors.
(http://www.asu.edu/studentaffairs/vp/safety/disruptive_student_behaviour).
Page 9 of 12
TWC301: General Principles of Multimedia Writing
Summer Session I 2011
A Note on Plagiarism
Definition: In an instructional setting, plagiarism occurs when a writer
deliberately uses someone else’s language, ideas, or other original (not common-
knowledge) material without acknowledging its source.
Council of Writing Program Administrators
Plagiarism is stealing; it is presenting work as your own that is not exclusively your own. Plagiarism can include
turning in part or all of someone else’s writing as your own or using information from another source without
giving credit. The consequences of plagiarism are severe, including failure of the assignment, probable failure for
the course, disciplinary referral to the Dean, and possible expulsion from the institution. Whenever you borrow a
phrase, sentence, paragraph—or even an idea stated in your own words—from any outside source without giving
credit, you have plagiarized.
Grading Policies
Assignment Distribution
Project #1: Comic Tutorial* 125 points
Project #2: Team Work Project* 150 points
Project #3: Online Professional Identity Project* 225 points
Homework (The homework grade is based on the percentage of the work you 500 points
completed,)
TOTAL 1000 points
*You must submit “final” versions of all major writing projects to pass the class.
Grading Scale
Grades are determined according to the following scale:
• A (950-1000)
• A- (900-949)
• B+ (870-899)
• B (830-869)
• B- (800-829)
• C+ (770-799)
• C (730-769)
• C- (700-729)
• D (600-699)
• E (599 or below)
Incomplete Grades
A course grade of “Incomplete” will be given only in extreme situations because the sad story is that most students
who request incompletes never finish the course. Please visit http://www.asu.edu/registrar/forms/regforms.html
under the Academic Record Forms section for the Incomplete Grade Request form, which is available in both Word
and as a PDF. The form must be completed by the student, signed by the student, the instructor, and the department
chair or school director.
Course Schedule/Calendar
This schedule is subject to change. All changes will be announced in the class announcements. For specific
assignment listings check the “Module” pages within the course blog.
• Due Date #1: 6/2/11
• Due Date #2: 6/4/11
• Due Date #3: 6/7/11
• Due Date #4: 6/9/11
• Due Date #5: 6/11/11
• Due Date #6: 6/14/11
• Due Date #7: 6/16/11
• Due Date #8: 6/18/11
• Due Date #9: 6/21/11
• Due Date #10: 6/23/11
• Due Date #11: 6/25/11
• Due Date #12: 6/28/11
• Due Date #13: 6/30/11
• Due Date #14: 7/1/11
Due Dates are for 11:59pm (Arizona Time, MST) on the date listed above. All homework (anything that is not a
major project) is due by the deadline, no exceptions.
Instructor Responsibilities:
• The instructor reserves the right to require proctoring or validation of students' academic work at the
instructor's discretion.
• The instructor reserves the right to change or modify course policies, materials, or deadlines in response to
student feedback or unforeseen circumstances. Students will be notified by the instructor of any changes in
course requirements or policies.
• The instructor requests that students allow the instructor 48 hours to respond to student emails or other forms
of contact.
• The instructor will attempt to be available during weekdays, however, as balance between family and work is
important in everyone's lives, the instructor reserves the right to be unavailable on weekends.
• The instructor requests that students allow the instructor one week from the date of submission (original
deadline, not if the assignment is turned in late), to post a grade, or provide feedback, on any homework
assignments, two weeks for major writing projects. (Note: the instructor will make every effort to provide faster
turn around time-however, sometimes faster turn around is not possible)
• The instructor may be "out-of-the-office" for extended periods of time, and requests that students understand
that this situation may occur and allow for such inconveniences (however, the instructor will always attempt to
email and/or post an announcement to the class about any such circumstances)
Student Agreement
The signature below, as well as attendance and participation in this class, signifies that the student has agreed to
abide by and adhere to the policies and regulations specified above. It is understood that the instructor may adapt or
change this Handbook/syllabus and the assignments contained within it according to circumstances that may arise
during the course of the class. The instructor may drop a student if the student fails to complete the work; however,
it is the student's responsibility to drop the course if they do not wish to continue. If the student does not drop the
course by the appropriate date the student will receive an F.
(Be sure to ask the instructor any questions concerning the handbook/syllabus before signing below.)
___________________________ ___________
Student’s Name, Printed Date